Jearld Moldenhauer announces at a Toronto Gay Action meeting that all are welcome to join a group of people starting a gay liberation newspaper. Issue 1 of The Body Politic hits the streets around Halloween. On its cover is an image from the Aug 28 We Demand protest on Parliament Hill.
1973

Someone throws a bomb into the stairwell leading up to Little Sister’s from its Thurlow Street entrance. No one is injured.

1988

As Little Sister’s prepares to take Canada Customs to court over its continued seizure of gay books, someone throws another bomb, this time through the back door of its downstairs neighbour, Thurlow’s Restaurant. Broken glass showers the diners, but no one is seriously hurt.

1990

Vancouver hosts the third annual Gay Games, bringing the community together like never before. The flood of 15,000 openly gay and lesbian visitors from around the world gives many people the courage to come out publicly and launches countless new community groups.
1992

Sexual orientation is added to the BC Human Rights Code.

Another bomb explodes in the stairwell leading up to Little Sister’s. No one is injured but considerable damage is done. No one is ever arrested.

1993

Xtra West begins publishing in Vancouver in July.
1996

The BC Supreme Court rules that Canada Customs discriminated against Little Sister’s and enforced the law with “arbitrariness, inconsistency and just plain foolishness.” However, the court upholds Customs’ power to seize material.
1997

Surrey teacher James Chamberlain asks his school board for permission to use gay-friendly storybooks in class. The Surrey school board refuses, citing parents’ concerns, launching a battle that will span six years and three levels of court and challenge gay invisibility in school curriculum.
2000

The Supreme Court of Canada agrees that Little Sister’s suffered “excessive and unnecessary prejudice.” The court orders Canada Customs to stop targeting the gay bookstore but does not strike down Customs’ authority to seize materials deemed obscene at the border.
2001

Aaron Webster is brutally beaten and left to die at the entrance to Stanley Park’s gay cruising trails on Nov 17. About 2,000 mourners march down Davie Street the next day to remember Webster and demand an end to gaybashings. Xtra West covers the subsequent push for police accountability, anti-homophobia programs in schools, and the apprehension of Webster’s killers.
2002

Police raid Calgary gay bathhouse Goliaths. Xtra West stops the presses and sends a reporter to Calgary to create a special supplement. Prosecutors stay the charges three years later after a survey shows Calgarians tolerate gay bathhouses.

In December, the Supreme Court of Canada orders the Surrey school board to reconsider its ban on three gay-friendly books. “Tolerance is always age-appropriate,” Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin rules.

2003

In February, after relentless coverage in Xtra West, police finally arrest a youth in connection with Aaron Webster’s death. Eight months later, police arrest three of his friends.

The first youth pleads guilty. Judge Valmond Romilly calls it a hate crime.

On July 8, the BC Court of Appeal orders the province to immediately begin issuing marriage licences to same-sex couples. (Ontario beat BC by a month. The rest of Canada lags.)

2004

BC Supreme Court Justice Mary Humphries convicts Ryan Cran of manslaughter in the Aaron Webster case but acquits Danny Rao for lack of evidence. Cran gets six years in prison, but Humphries doesn’t call it a hate crime. Outraged community members call for an inquiry into the prosecution’s handling of the case.